Dionysius the Sophist
poet with epigram in the Greek Anthology
Dionysius the Sophist (2nd century BC) was a little-known Greek writer, some of whose poems survive in the Greek Anthology.
Quotes
edit- Ἡ τὰ ῥόδα, ῥοδόεσσαν ἔχεις χάριν ἀλλὰ τί πωλεῖς;
σαυτήν, ἢ τὰ ῥόδα; ἠὲ συναμφότερα;- You with the roses, rosy is your charm; but what do you sell, yourself or the roses, or both?
- Anthologia Palatina, v, 81 (W. R. Paton, Greek Anthology, i, p. 167)
- A. C. Benson, "The Flower-Girl", The Reed of Pan (1922), p. 169:
- Pretty maid, you are fair as the roses you bear;
Come tell me, what is it you sell?
Your kisses, your posies, yourself or your roses,
Or yourself and your roses as well?
- Pretty maid, you are fair as the roses you bear;
- Cf. F. L. Lucas, "The Rose-girl", Greek Poetry for Everyman (1951), p. 328; Simon Raven, The Roses of Picardie (1980), ch. 6